http://www.gulf-times.com/bangladesh/245/details/361629/debarred-jamaat-turns-violent

Debarred Jamaat turns violent

[image: Debarred Jamaat turns violent]
9:28 PM
3
August
2013

*Students clash with police at Dhaka University in Dhaka during a protest.*

*Agencies/Dhaka*

Fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami activists yesterday held violent
demonstrations, exploding several homemade bombs, to protest a Bangladeshi
court ruling that barred it from contesting future polls.

Jamaat and its student wing, Islami Chhatra Shibir, held a procession near
Mohakhali flyover in Dhaka and resorted to vandalism and blasts, police
said.

They exploded several country-made bombs and vandalised a CNG-run
three-wheeler at Mohakhali area. In Bogra, the Islamists hurled explosive
devices at police, who retaliated by firing rubber bullets. No casualties
were reported in the incidents.

Jamaat’s demonstrations were part of planned street protests against the
High Court verdict scrapping the party’s registration with the election
commission (EC) and disqualifying it from contesting future polls as its
charter breached the secular constitution.

The Jamaat has called a 48-hour nationwide general strike from August 12 to
denounce the judgement. It has also announced to challenge the verdict
before the apex appellate division of the Supreme Court.

In an editorial, Bangladesh newspaper *Prothom Alo* blasted the Jamaat
saying, “legal battle and street vandalism do not go hand in hand” and
called the new generation of the party leadership to decide if they would
continue to shoulder the misdeeds of their leaders during the 1971 war.

The High Court allowed the Jamaat to challenge the verdict as the issue
involved constitutional matters. Legal experts said the judgement did not
declare the party unlawful and just disqualified it from contesting polls
on constitutional grounds.

The Jamaat, which was once the East Pakistan wing of Jamaat-e-Islami of
Pakistan, also received support from its erstwhile mother organisation in
Islamabad. Pakistan Jamaat-e-Islami chief Syed Munawar Hasan criticised the
court judgement, calling it “unconstitutional, partial and biased.”

Hasan said the Jamaat in Bangladesh was being “victimised” and its
leadership has been convicted and sentenced to life terms and even deaths
by a special tribunal since the trial of war crimes suspects began in 2010.

“So far, this was being done by a ‘so-called tribunal’ (International
Crimes Tribunal) but now the High Court had stepped in to do the same,” the
Pakistani Jamaat chief said.

The Islamists in Bangladesh have been protesting against the sentencing of
its top leaders by the tribunal for “crimes against humanity” during the
1971 Bangladesh liberation war siding with Pakistani troops.

So far five Jamaat leaders have been sentenced to death for murder, mass
murder, rape and religious persecution in the 1971 war.

* *

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Peace Is Doable

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